What do Jim Nantz, OCM, a Gjallarhorn and a bonus par-3 have in common? Tepetonka

Two friends are dreaming their dreams, just as they did 47 years ago.

NEW LONDON, Minn. – Jim Nantz has been living out his boyhood dream as the face of CBS Sports for more than three decades. Sometimes it takes a dreamer to see the dream of another dear friend unfolding.

“There’s something special when you’re looking at someone who has a vision and a dream, and you believe in them and you know that dream is coming true,” Nantz said on a warm, sunny day in late July to some of the founding members of Tepetonka Golf Club, a 228-acre, private golf club being built in the western corner of Minnesota by his University of Houston golf teammate Mark Haugejorde. Nantz fixed his eyes on his longtime friend and added, “And I saw it again today. First met you in 1977, holy smokes, 47 years ago. I’m so darn proud of you. It is your calling.”

Haugejorde was a senior on the Cougars team, a gentle giant who could crush it off the tee, when Nantz was a freshman, and Nantz eventually would move into Haugejorde’s room after he graduated. Fast forward to 2020 when Haugejorde was the high bidder for a Zoom call with Nantz at Tom Lehman’s charity event.

“You didn’t have to buy this,” Nantz told him when they spoke.

“It was for a good cause,” Haugejorde said with a smile.

Jim Nantz tours the property at Tepetonka Golf Club in New London, Minnesota, his fourth visit to the private destination club being built by his college friend. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Nantz had a better idea. He invited Haugejorde, who serves as executive director of At the Turn, a non-profit devoted to helping high school students and young adults, to bring his top donor out to Cypress Point Golf Club in Pebble Beach, California – where Nantz is a member – and they’d play a round together at the famed course and have a meal.

“I thought that will go over pretty well,” Haugejorde recalled.

Construction is expected to be completed by the end of 2024 on Tepetonka Golf Club in New London, Minnesota. (Courtesy Tepetonka Club)

A friendship was rekindled, and during that trip Haugejorde shared his dream to create a club in his golf-crazed home state of Minnesota, much like his father had done years before at Little Crow Country Club (now a 27-hole facility known as Little Crow Resort), a public course about 90 miles west of Minneapolis. Nantz told him it was his true calling to do so. Two months later, Haugejorde stumbled upon the land that is being shaped into Tepetonka while driving his 94-year-old mother to Little Crow to play nine holes. Coasting past land where he used to pheasant hunt as a kid, he took a left turn and was struck by the expanse of farmland, the beautiful cedars and a ravine. He looked out the window and said, “That’s it.”

Haugejorde acquired the land and consulted a number of leading course designers, but it was a podcast he heard with the team of Geoff Ogilvy, Mike Cocking and Ashley Mead that convinced him that OCM, who are headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, was right for his job.

“When Mark contacted us during Covid, we saw the maps and some pictures. The first time we first turned up, it was 17 degrees. It was April by the way, Australians aren’t meant for this stuff,” Ogilvy said, drawing laughter. “We looked at him and said this is incredible land and it reminded us of St. Andrews Beach, a course all three of us love (near) Melbourne.”

During that first visit, OCM walked the land as Haugejorde waited patiently for them to give the verdict on a potential routing. “It was worth the wait,” Haugejorde said.

“It just fits,” Ogilvy said. “We haven’t really moved much dirt. The routing is just perfect, tees are generally next to the greens. … Every time I come back, it’s better than I imagined.”

“It’s like building a house,” Mead explained, “and not a lot happens in the start as you put the frame up and you start to get a feel for what the rooms are going to look like, but we’re getting to the point where we can really see the golf course. After this point, we start putting the sand in the bunkers and grassing the fairways.”

The par-3 third hole at Tepetonka Golf Club in New London, Minnesota, under construction in July 2024 (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Construction is expected to be completed by the end of the year, and the hope is for there to be some walking-only preview play in late summer of 2025 before the curtain officially comes up in spring 2026 in concert with the opening of the Supper Club.

That’s one of several ways Nantz will be intimately involved with the project and making Haugejorde’s dream come to fruition. Nantz grew curious as he heard about the progress being made on Tepetonka. While in town to broadcast a Minnesota Vikings game, he took CBS partner Tony Romo to a steak dinner in Minneapolis to meet the OCM architects and Haugejorde. Nantz is quick to point out that he has stood on many shoulders to get where he is in life and that his Houston Cougar “brothers” always believed in his crazy dream of calling the Masters and interviewing his roommate Fred Couples as the champion someday. He believes in his old pal’s dream and ponied up for a founding membership, but he’s also going to have a bigger role, too, helping design Hog Heaven, the club’s short course.

“I’ve always had this dream if I wasn’t a broadcaster the thing I think would be the most fun thing to be a part of is to shape the Earth and be in golf course architecture,” Nantz said.

Geoff Ogilvy of OCM (left) and Jim Nantz of CBS Sports tour Tepetonka Golf Club, a private golf destination that Ogilvy and his design partners are constructing on two hours west of Minneapolis. (Courtesy Tepetonka Club)

“We love building short courses because you can get a bit wilder and have fun with it,” Ogilvy said. “No one is worried about their score or handicap. It’s all about fun.”

A year ago, during another visit for a Vikings game, Nantz invited a bunch of his CBS crew to see for themselves the land that is becoming Tepetonka. The fescue was high, but Nantz came prepared with a pad and a pen and that’s when he had an idea. He’s famously designed two replica holes at his homes – famed No. 7 in his backyard at his Pebble Beach home and the green at No. 13 at Augusta National at his home in Nashville. Family and friends compete to make an ace and get their name on “The Rock of Fame.” Nantz envisions members and their guests retiring to the area he dubbed “Hog Heaven,” a natural amphitheater just below the rim looking down on the scope of the whole project to try their hands at a downhill one-shotter not far from the clubhouse.

“These old Houston Cougars started noodling over this concept and what ended up on this scratch pad – you call it a plank, I call it a platform or a stage – it will be raised and there will be a rail around that stage where you’re at ankle level looking at a player on top of that tee and hitting down on the ninth green at the short course. Everyone here that day will be encouraged to come together at Hog Heaven. To summon everyone to the site, what will be played?

“The Gjallarhorn,” Haugejorde said of the horn according to Norse mythology that announced the arrival of the gods and best-known these days to ignite another Skol chant at Minnesota Vikings games.

“I was just so afraid I was going to pronounce it wrong,” Nantz said. “Of course, the Gjallarhorn. You’ll hear it all over the course. It’s a warning to come on back. At 5 o’clock, grab whatever your favorite beverage is and let’s go to The Rock of Fame. Let’s gather as one. Groups are coming in from around the country and all over the world. You get to meet people. There aren’t going to be 150 people a day. It’s going to be an experience, it’s going to be intimate, it’s going to be fun.

“Everyone gets a chance to walk up on that stage, hit a shot down that hill, the ball will hang in the air for the longest time, and if anybody makes it, and they will, their name will be on a plaque on our own boulder, our own Rock of Fame experience, with everybody cheering them on and our own announcer.

“You take your one swing, your one little pitch down the hill to try to leave your mark of permanence at Tepetonka at Hog Heaven. The last time I said ‘Hog Heaven,’ Arkansas was winning the national championship in basketball in 1995. It has a whole new meaning to me. This is Hog Heaven. Haugie, pal, thanks for believing in that too.”

He paused and then added, “Thank you for not believing it’s one of my crazier ideas.”

Two friends are dreaming their dreams, just as they did 47 years ago.

OCM design team to renovate The Hills as New Zealand heavyweights form new partnership

The founders of Te Arai Links, Tara Iti join forces with business magnate on The Hills.

The developers of highly ranked Te Arai Links and Tara Iti golf clubs in New Zealand announced this week that they will partner with the owners of The Hills course near Arrowtown to redevelop the property.

The design team of Geoff Ogilvy, Mike Cocking and Ashley Mead – OCM – will rebuild the course. Plans also include the introduction of a golf training facility, fitness center, on-site accommodations, luxurious real estate and a remodel of the clubhouse.

The Hills was opened in 2007 by Sir Michael Hill, one of the most successful businessmen in New Zealand. The course was designed by Darby Partners and included a nine-hole par-3 course designed by Darius Oliver in 2019. The main course is notable for its inclusion of sculptures around the course, which will remain throughout the renovation.

Jim Rohrstaff and Ric Kayne, the developers of Tara Iti and Te Arai, will partner with Hill and his daughter, Emma Hill, on the work at The Hills.

The Hills New Zealand
Ric Kayne, Jim Rohrstaff, Emma Hill and Sir Michael Hill at The Hills (Courtesy of The Hills)

The private Tara Iti in Mangawhai was designed by Tom Doak and opened in 2015, and it ties for No. 9 on Golfweek’s Best list of top courses outside the U.S. The South Course at the resort-based Te Arai Links just down the beach from Tara Iti was designed by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw and opened in 2022, and it ties for No. 23 on the list of best international courses. Doak also designed a course at Te Arai, the North, which should appear on the list of top international courses as soon as it receives enough votes.

As with Tara Iti, The Hills will be redeveloped as a high-end equity club with limited membership. The renovations, including a new routing, will take place over to the winters of 2026 and 2027, and the project should be completed in 2028.

OCM has been busy of late with a rapidly expanding portfolio of international work, having recently completed a redesign of Medinah No. 3 in Illinois. Based near Melbourne, Australia, the firm has done renovation work to such Sandbelt stalwarts as Kingston Heath, Peninsula Kingswood and Victoria. The team also renovated Shady Oaks in Texas, longtime home of Ben Hogan, and it also has a new course named Tepetonka Club under construction in Minnesota in partnership with broadcaster Jim Nantz.

Check out a selection of photos of The Hills as it currently sits, including two architectural sketches that show what the OCM design team have in mind.

Could Geoff Ogilvy be his generation’s Ben Crenshaw as a course architect? That and more in this architecture-heavy Q&A with the former U.S. Open champ

“I think I’m one of the only guys on the range without a launch monitor.”

If you’re going to be stuck in a car for a two-plus-hour drive, you’d be hard-pressed to enjoy better company than Australian golfer Geoff Ogilvy.

In August, on the drive from Minneapolis to the western corner of the Land of 10,000 Lakes, where he and his design partners Mike Cocking and Ashley Mead are preparing to build Tepetonka, Minnesota’s first private golf destination on 228 acres of gorgeous rolling land with Shakopee Creek cutting through a quarter of the property, Ogilvy and I (and PR man/wheelman Matthew Gibb) talked at length about his shift into the golf-course design business among other things.

I’m probably not the first to say this, and admittedly it’s early days for his venture into the architecture space, but Ogilvy could be his generation’s Ben Crenshaw, who made a smooth transition from Masters champion to one of the most coveted designers in golf. OCM as the next Coore-Crenshaw? We can only hope to be so lucky.

Ogilvy turned pro in 1998, just as Tiger Woods was beginning to rule the game, and Ogilvy did well to win eight times on the PGA Tour (plus another four times on the DP World Tour), including the 2006 U.S. Open at Winged Foot. He was a member of the International Team for the Presidents Cup three times and has been a vice captain on the last three teams. It seems inevitable that he will get his turn at the captaincy (and when he does the U.S. may finally have met its match in that event).

Ogilvy, 46, has reduced his play in recent years, including moving back to his native Australia for a time, and is starting to make a name for himself in the design world with work done at Shady Oaks Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, back home in Melbourne at Peninsula-Kingswood and is in the process of completing a significant re-do of Medinah No. 3 near Chicago, which will host the 2026 Presidents Cup. (He also mentioned a course the firm is building in Georgia but wouldn’t disclose the name.)

A couple hours in the car flew by and the discussion continued over lunch and in between his site visit. Here are some of the highlights.

Jim Nantz named design consultant on short course at club being designed by Geoff Ogilvy and his partners at OCM

“If I wasn’t a broadcaster, I think the most fun thing to be a part of is to shape the Earth … “

Jim Nantz and his former college teammate have united to make their dreams come true.

Mark Haugejorde is the chairman of Tepetonka, a 228-acre, private golf destination two hours west of the Twin Cities, which is set to break ground this year. Having signed the design firm of OCM Golf – consisting of PGA Tour pro Geoff Ogilvy, Mike Cocking and Ashley Meade – to its first original U.S. design, Haugejorde announced Tuesday that esteemed CBS Sports broadcaster Jim Nantz will serve as a design consultant on the creation of The Prox, the club’s short course.

“I’ve always had this dream if I wasn’t a broadcaster, I think the most fun thing to be a part of is to shape the Earth and be in golf course architecture,” Nantz said during “The Five Clubs” podcast with host Gary Williams, course architect Gil Hanse and ESPN college basketball analyst and avid golfer Jay Bilas on March 1.

Haugejorde happened to be listening to the podcast one day in his office as his old teammate from their days playing on the golf team at the University of Houston shared his dream to leave his mark on the Earth, and Nantz’s words stopped him in his track.

“What did he just say?” Haugejorde recalled. “It hit me right away. Jim was always going to be involved as a founding member, but I had this idea that he could have an even bigger role.”

Jim Nantz, center, poses with Mike Schultz, left, and Mark Haugejorde of Tepetonka Club at Oak Hill during the 2023 PGA Championship. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Nantz’s previous design work is limited to the replica hole of the iconic par-3 seventh hole at Pebble Beach that he designed in his backyard not far from the real thing.

“I’m not trying to compare that with something as important as what the OCM guys are going to do, but I’ve really truly dreamt of this,” Nantz told Golfweek. “I can’t wait to put on the mud boots and go out and talk it through with these guys. I know my role here, the OCM team, they’re geniuses. I can’t wait to just to learn from them and get to throw in one little suggestion – ‘Move this over here.’”

“Having had the opportunity to spend some time with Jim recently, it became apparent that he has a keen interest in golf course design and specifically in short courses,” said OCM’s Cocking. “The Prox will be integrated into Tepetonka’s practice facility, and we’re looking forward to working with Jim on the design. His input and experience will be invaluable in what we’re creating.”

Haugejorde, who once served as general manager of Jack Nicklaus International, is following in the footsteps of his father, who during a stint in the military was asked to build a golf course for the officer’s club in Japan in 1947. Later, his father spearheaded efforts to build Little Crow Country Club (now a 27-hole facility known as Little Crow Resort), a public course in West Central Minnesota. Haugejorde picked up the game there and won the 1973 high school state championship not far from the land near New London, Minnesota, where he used to go pheasant hunting as a kid and purchased to become the future home of his dream course, Tepetonka. The origin of the club’s name stems from a visit to the local historical society by Haugejorde’s intern, who found an article detailing that there had been a Tepetonka Hotel nearby on Green Lake, one of the state’s beautiful bodies of water.

“The article said that people would come from neighboring states to enjoy the clean water and great fishing. I thought they’re coming from neighboring states to come enjoy the great golf,” Haugejorde said. “Tepetonka stands for big house, and the brand is really taking off.”

Haugejorde took a similar leap of faith in signing OCM as his design team. Ogilvy came highly recommended by Gregg Tryhus, the owner of Grayhawk Development and the visionary behind Whisper Rock, a 36-hole private facility in north Scottsdale, Arizona, where Ogilvy is a member. One of Minnesota’s favorite golfing sons Tim Herron also seconded the suggestion. Haugejorde did his due diligence, checking the firm’s work at Shady Oaks in Fort Worth, Texas, but again it was a podcast that played a pivotal role in his decision. Driving across Florida to meet with his first two members, Haugejorde listened to an interview with Cocking.

“I swear, if it’s possible, he was talking to me,” Haugejorde said.

Australian-based OCM, which is also doing a dramatic renovation of Medinah No. 3 near Chicago, was hired to design Tepetonka even though they’d neither met Haugejorde in person nor walked the property where the course will be built due to COVID-19 travel restrictions and only had seen drone footage.

A map of the course routing of Tepetonka, a private destination golf course being built west of Minneapolis by the design firm OCM. (Courtesy Tepetonka)

Tepetonka is Minnesota’s first entry into the private golf destination category, despite the state being renowned the world over for hosting events at historic venues. Haugejorde said the club would include lodging and a supper club. Douglas Fredrikson Architects has been selected to design the clubhouse and other buildings. Mike Schultz, who served as the longtime pro at Hazeltine National (1976-2012), including one summer when Haugejorde worked for him during college, will be the director of golf emeritus.

Tepetonka’s business model is designed for 20 founding members and 100 memberships in all. Play will be limited to a maximum of 90 players per day.

“It’s fractional ownership like NetJets, where you own a piece of the plane, here you own a piece of the golf course,” he said. “There are no dues. Instead you pre-purchase your golf days, everyone agrees to buy so much access for the golf course. So, everybody’s got the same amount, and it’s never crowded. We’ve got lodging and a supper club and it’s your course to come out and have as much fun as you want.”

He added: “The goal for each member or guest’s day is summed up in the phrase: ‘Can’t wait to get there – hate to leave!’ ”

Nantz is scheduled to get his boots muddy with OCM in August and will be back early in the NFL season when the Minnesota Vikings host the Kansas City Chiefs. Construction is set to commence in October, and the course, which is set to be a par 70 measuring 6,765 yards from the tips, is scheduled to open in the summer of 2025.

“I’ve had the pleasure of knowing Mark Haugejorde for over 40 years, and Tepetonka is his life’s calling,” Nantz said. “I think it’s going to be legendary. Minnesota is a golf-crazed state, and this is going to be a showcase course for Minnesota and America.”

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